Neurons in the Paraventricular Nucleus of the Hypothalamus that Project to the Sexually Dimorphic Lower Lumbar Spinal Cord Concentrate 3H‐Estradiol in the Male Rat

Abstract
The location and distribution of estradiol‐concentrating neurons in the hypothalamus afferent to segments of lumbar spinal cord that contain the sexually dimorphic spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) were determined by combining retrograde fluorescent tract tracing with steroid hormone autoradiography. Injections of Fluorogold were made into segments of L5‐L6 of the spinal cord of adult male rats and 12 days later animals were castrated. One week following castration, males received injections of [3H]estradiol and were perfused. Their brains were then processed for steroid hormone autoradiography. Following exposure times of 11 to 12 months, autoradiograms were developed and the hypothalamus was analyzed for neurons that concentrate estradiol and project to the spinal cord.Numerous neurons in the hypothalamus projected to the spinal cord, specifically neurons in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), the lateral hypothalamus and the dorsal area of the hypothalamus. Although many subnuclei of PVN, as well as lateral hypothalamus, contained Fluorogold labelled neurons and estradiol concentrating neurons, the majority of double labeled cells were found in the lateral parvocellular (lp) subnucleus of PVN. Approximately 30% of the neurons in the lp subnucleus that projected to spinal cord also concentrated estradiol. Up to one half of the estradiol‐concentrating neurons in Ip sent axons to the lower lumbar spinal cord. These results suggest that some of the effects of gonadal steroid hormones on SNB development, plasticity and function may in fact, be indirect, via steroid‐sensitive afferents.